Arvind Kejriwal with the crowd in “An Insignificant Man.” (http://insignificantman.com)

“An Insignificant Man,” chronicling the birth of Aam Aadmi Party and the rise of its leader Arvind Kejriwal, is among three documentaries from India to be screened at the upcoming Toronto Film Festival. – @Siliconeer #Siliconeer #Bollywood #ArvindKejriwal #AAP #AamAadmiParty #AnInsignificantMan #TheCinemaTravellers #Indiainaday #KhushbooRanka #VinayShukla #ShirleyAbraham #AmitMadheshiya #RichieMehta

“The Cinema Travellers”, a documentary on the traveling cinemas in India by Shirley Abraham and Amit Madheshiya, and Richie Mehta’s “India in a Day” are the other two films to be screened at the annual extravaganza from September 8-18, in addition to “An Insignificant Man.”

Directed by Khushboo Ranka and Vinay Shukla and produced by “Ship of Theseus”-director Anand Gandhi, “An Insignificant Man” was filmed over the course of two years.

The director duo, who claim to have close access to AAP and its leaders, said their film is an attempt to study various forces shaping democracy.

“Today the Aam Aadmi Party is at the center of much debate. We are neither looking to make heroes out of them for being protestors nor wanting to vilify them for being politicians.

Santosh in “An Insignificant Man.” (http://insignificantman.com)

“Our film tells a story that resonates with universal concerns about democracy. Our attempt has been to construct a nuanced portrait of the various forces shaping democracy, the biggest of which is the voter,” the director duo said in a statement.

Previously titled “Proposition for a Revolution,” the crowd-funded film has won several international awards including the Sundance Fund, the IDFABertha grant and the Busan fund.

The second documentary “The Cinema Travellers” will go to the Toronto Film Festival after a much-lauded screening at the Cannes Film Festival where it won Special Jury Prize – L’Oeil d’or: Le Prix du documentaire.

Madheshiya and Abraham document the nearly seven-decade-long tradition of traveling cinemas as they are on the brink of fading away.

“Traveling cinemas are part of this collective communal experience for seven decades but they don’t get any mention in our cinematic history. That was the trigger point to start the project,” the director duo told PTI in an interview.

Mehta’s documentary is a unique experiment in filmmaking as it invited people from across the country to capture the essence of an evolving India in a single day.